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Ken Catran
Ken Catran
from Wikipedia

Ken Catran (born 16 May 1944) is a children's novelist and television screenwriter from New Zealand.

Career

[edit]

Catran is the author of many teen novels, including Taken at the Flood, Voyage with Jason, Doomfire on Venus, Space Wolf, Jacko Moran: Sniper, Talking to Blue and its sequels Blue Murder and Blue Blood. He also contributed to the television dramas Shortland Street and Close to Home.[1][2] Around 1993, he moved away from screenwriting to focus more on writing novels.[3][4] Since then, he has become a prolific and varied writer within the New Zealand literary community.[5]

Ken's television credits include soap operas (Radio Waves, Close to Home), Steel Riders (a drama series for young adults) as well as episodes in other TV dramas such as Mortimer's Patch.[4]

He also penned Under the Mountain, an 8-episode treatment of the Maurice Gee novel, and wrote the critically well-received Hanlon, a biographical law drama. The opening episode treating sympathetically the Minnie Dean case received positive ratings and critical reception.[4][6]

Awards

[edit]

In 1986, Catran won the Drama Script category in the Listener Television Awards (also called the GOFTA Awards) for the first episode of Hanlon, In Defence of Minnie Dean.[6][7]

In 2004, Catran won the Esther Glen Award, presented by LIANZA, for his book, Jacko Moran, Sniper.[2] Another six of his books have been short-listed for the award from 1997 to 2013, and Smiling Jack was a finalist for the 2011 LIANZA Young Adult Fiction Award.[2][8]

In 2001, Catran's book, Voyage with Jason, won the Children's Book of the Year award, and the Young Adult Fiction category, at the New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards.[9] Later, his book, Smiling Jack, won the Children's Choice Young Adult Fiction category at the 2011 awards.[10] An additional three of his books have been shortlisted at the various incarnations of these awards — Deepwater Black and Dream-bite for Senior Fiction, and Something Weird about Mr Foster for Junior Fiction.[2]

In 2007, after writing more than 30 novels, he won the Margaret Mahy Medal, awarded by the Storylines Children's Literature Charitable Trust to a person who has made a significant contribution to children's literature, publishing, or literacy.[11][12] At least one of his books have been on the Storylines Notable Books List in the Young Adult Fiction category from when the list was established in 2000 to 2008, and again in 2011.[2][13] In 2003 one of his books was included in the Junior Fiction category of the list, Something Weird About Mr Foster.[2]

He was the University of Otago College of Education Children's Writer in Residence in 1996, and the University of Waikato Writer in Residence in 2007.[2][14]

In 2005 he was presented with the Sir Julius Vogel Award for services to science fiction and fantasy, and was nominated for the Sir Julius Vogel Best Novel for Protus Rising.[2]

Personal life

[edit]

Catran is married to Wendy Catran, a screenwriter and children's writer.[4] They live in Waimate, a township in South Canterbury, New Zealand.[15] Through an interview, he has revealed that he chose writing over other interests because it 'came naturally to me'. He relaxes by going for walks and reading regularly.[16]

Catran also frequently visits schools and gives advice to young writers on creating novels and short stories.[1]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ken Catran (born 16 May 1944) is a New Zealand children's and young adult novelist and television screenwriter known for his prolific contributions to fiction for young readers and scripting for prominent New Zealand television series. He has written over 30 acclaimed novels, often featuring science fiction, adventure, historical, and coming-of-age themes, with notable works including the Deepwater series and titles such as Taken at the Flood and Voyage with Jason (which won Book of the Year at the 2001 New Zealand Post Book Awards). As a scriptwriter, he created and wrote for children's sci-fi series such as Children of the Dog Star (1984, which won a Feltex Award) and contributed to programs including Under the Mountain, Hanlon, and others, establishing himself as one of New Zealand's most versatile and productive writers for youth audiences since the 1970s. His career spans literature and screen media, earning him major honours including the 2007 Margaret Mahy Medal for distinguished contribution to children's literature.

Early life

Early life and entry into writing

Ken Catran was born on 16 May 1944 in Auckland, New Zealand. He grew up in Auckland and Wellington as part of a fairly normal suburban family with three sisters and a father who served as an Air Force squadron leader. Catran left school in the early 1960s with no qualifications, having not sat the School Certificate examination, as school held little interest for him. He began writing short stories around the age of 10 but was too shy to show them to anyone. His early employment included a position at the Post Office, though his main energy went into reading and writing, as he later reflected that "there was really nothing else I wanted to do." In the early 1960s he joined the New Zealand Broadcasting Corporation as a radio journalist, where he learned a great deal about stories and structure from novelist Arthur E Jones. In 1964 Catran left broadcasting to take up door-to-door typewriter sales, a job he held for many years; he later described it as helpful for overcoming his shyness and learning about people, noting that "Television is all about people, communicating with them and finding out how they communicate back." Despite these experiences he repeatedly failed to break into television writing in Wellington, which he called a "closed shop" due to his lack of connections and university education, and efforts to sell scripts "ran into a brick wall." By 1973 he resolved to get serious about writing for television and, with a second channel on the horizon, moved north ahead of the 1975 launch of South Pacific Television in search of better opportunities. There he found more welcoming figures in the industry, leading to his first produced television script in 1976.

Career

Television career

Ken Catran began his television writing career in the mid-1970s after earlier unsuccessful attempts to enter the industry. His screen debut occurred in 1976 with an episode of the historical drama The Immigrants titled "The Spanish Lady." He contributed multiple episodes to the pioneering soap opera Close to Home and penned eight episodes of the short-lived Radio Waves in 1978. Catran also collaborated with established writer Roger Simpson on the successful goldmining series Hunter's Gold. During the 1980s, Catran established himself as a prominent writer of children's and "kidult" adventure dramas. In 1981, he delivered his first solo kidult credit with an eight-episode adaptation of Maurice Gee's novel Under the Mountain, which earned a Feltex Award for Best Drama. He created and wrote all six episodes of Children of the Dog Star in 1984, a series that incorporated some Māori elements and won him a Feltex Award. Catran's most critically acclaimed television work came with the 1985 miniseries Hanlon, for which he wrote all seven episodes. The first episode, "In Defence of Minnie Dean," received a GOFTA Award for Best Drama Script in 1986, and the series earned an International Emmy nomination for Best Overseas Drama. Following Hanlon, Catran experienced a 12-month dry spell in scripting work after a local television executive reportedly told him he had already earned enough for a scriptwriter that year. He resumed prolific output in the late 1980s and early 1990s with additional kidult and family-oriented series. These included eight episodes of Steel Riders in 1987, the four-episode Night of the Red Hunter in 1989 (which he created), six episodes of The Boy from Andromeda in 1991, 14 episodes of The New Adventures of Black Beauty from 1990 to 1992, and contributions to Star Runner (1991), Space Knights, Hotshotz, Country GP, Mortimer's Patch, and All For One. In 1992, he wrote five episodes of Shortland Street. Catran's only feature film screenplay was the 1993 adaptation Alex, based on Tessa Duder’s novels. By the early 1990s, he had become one of New Zealand's busiest television writers, with his work appearing across numerous productions.

Literary career

Ken Catran began shifting his primary focus to novels in the early 1990s, around the time his television project Alex entered production, while continuing to draw on his screenwriting experience to craft fast-paced narratives suited to teenage readers. He has written more than 50 books, most aimed at young adults, spanning genres such as science fiction, fantasy, historical fiction, and contemporary thrillers, often incorporating themes of war, survival, and personal discovery. His science fiction works include the Deepwater trilogy, beginning with Deepwater Black (1992), set on a generation spaceship escaping a virus-ravaged Earth, which was adapted into a short-lived American television series. Other notable science fiction and fantasy titles are Doomfire on Venus (1993), Protus Rising (2004), Nina of the Dark (2009), and Earth Dragon, Fire Hare (2012). In historical and war-themed fiction, Catran produced works such as Letters from the Coffin Trenches (2002), Jacko Moran: Sniper (2003), Robert Moran: Private (2004), and Lin and the Red Stranger (2003). Contemporary and thriller novels feature prominently in his output, including Talking to Blue (2000) and its sequel Blue Murder (2002), Taken at the Flood (2001), Something Weird About Mr Foster (2002) and its sequel, Seal Boy (2004), Red Leader Down, and Monsters of Blood and Honour. He also novelised the television series The Tribe as Mall Rats (2001). Catran's books have earned consistent recognition, with multiple shortlistings on the Storylines Notable Books List from 2000 to 2008 and in 2011, reflecting his prolific contribution to New Zealand young adult literature.

Awards and recognition

Ken Catran has received numerous awards and honours for his scriptwriting in New Zealand television and his contributions to children's and young adult literature. In television, he won Feltex Television Awards for Best Drama for Under the Mountain in 1982. Children of the Dog Star also earned a Golden Gate Award for Best Miniseries at the San Francisco International Film Festival in 1984. In 1986, Catran won Best Drama Script and Best Drama Programme at the National Mutual GOFTA Awards for the Hanlon episode "In Defence of Minnie Dean," while the Hanlon series received a nomination for Best Overseas Drama at the International Emmy Awards. For his literary work, Catran won Book of the Year and Best in Senior Fiction at the New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards in 2001 for Voyage with Jason. He received the LIANZA Esther Glen Award for Jacko Moran: Sniper in 2004. In 2007, he was awarded the Margaret Mahy Medal for distinguished contribution to children's literature and served as Writer in Residence at the University of Waikato. He also won Children's Choice Young Adult Fiction at the New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards in 2011 for Smiling Jack. Catran has been shortlisted multiple times for prestigious prizes, including the LIANZA Esther Glen Award and New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards—for example, for Deepwater Black in 1993, Dream-Bite in 1995, and several titles in 2003.

Personal life

Personal life

Ken Catran is married to Wendy Catran, a screenwriter and children's writer. They met while working together as part of the original writing team on the New Zealand television soap opera Shortland Street. He lives in Waimate, a township in South Canterbury, New Zealand. Catran regularly visits schools to speak with students and offer guidance to young writers on creating novels and short stories.
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